Darold E. Wingert Wingert Water Systems, Inc. and Alvena Wingert v. Norris J. Devoll

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 2010
Docket03-09-00440-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Darold E. Wingert Wingert Water Systems, Inc. and Alvena Wingert v. Norris J. Devoll (Darold E. Wingert Wingert Water Systems, Inc. and Alvena Wingert v. Norris J. Devoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darold E. Wingert Wingert Water Systems, Inc. and Alvena Wingert v. Norris J. Devoll, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-09-00440-CV

Darold E. Wingert, Wingert Water Systems, Inc., and Alvena Wingert, Appellants



v.



Norris J. DeVoll, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. C2006-1271A, HONORABLE DIB WALDRIP, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



After a dispute over the management of a property owners' association, appellant Darold Wingert filed suit against five members of the association's board of directors, including appellee Norris DeVoll, for libel and slander. DeVoll, representing himself pro se, filed a number of counterclaims against Darold Wingert and third-party defendants Wingert Water Systems, Inc. and Alvena Wingert (collectively, "the Wingerts"). (1) The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants on Darold Wingert's libel and slander claims, then proceeded with a bench trial on DeVoll's counterclaims, ultimately awarding damages to DeVoll for intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy. On appeal, the Wingerts argue that the trial court erred in awarding damages for intentional infliction of emotional distress and civil conspiracy. For the reasons that follow, we reverse and render judgment that DeVoll take nothing.



BACKGROUND This suit arose from the same events described by this Court in Wingert v. Scenic Heights Subdivision Property Owners Ass'n, No. 03-07-00297-CV, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 5334 (Tex. App.--Austin July 16, 2008, no pet.) (mem. op.) ("Wingert I"). In October 2006, after an at-large election by the Association's membership, Darold Wingert assumed the role of president of the Scenic Heights Subdivision Property Owners Association ("the Association"). Litigation ensued when members of the Association's board of directors, including DeVoll, refused to recognize Wingert's election, based on the fact that the Association bylaws required officers to be chosen by the directors. In Wingert I, this Court affirmed the trial court's judgment declaring that the at-large election was not legally effective and permanently enjoining Darold Wingert and two others from representing or acting on behalf of the Association. See id. at *1-2.

Darold Wingert then filed the present suit against DeVoll and four other Association board members individually, seeking damages of $20 million for libel and slander based on statements that were allegedly posted on the Association's website in connection with the initial litigation. DeVoll brought counterclaims against the Wingerts for (1) negligence, (2) slander of title, (3) filing a fraudulent document, (4) civil conspiracy, (5) abuse of litigation, (2) (6) intentional infliction of emotional distress, and (7) defamation. The trial court granted summary judgment dismissing Darold Wingert's libel and slander claims as to all five defendants, entered an agreed order of dismissal with prejudice as to the counterclaims of all defendants other than DeVoll, and proceeded to a bench trial on the merits of DeVoll's counterclaims.

At trial, DeVoll stated on the record that he was abandoning his abuse-of-litigation claim. See In re C.C.J., 244 S.W.3d 911, 921 (Tex. App.--Dallas 2008, no pet.) (observing that party may abandon claim by stipulation at trial). With respect to his remaining claims, DeVoll alleged that the Wingerts had conspired to undermine his authority with the Association membership by perpetuating rumors that he did not own property in the Scenic Heights Subdivision. To support this allegation, DeVoll produced several petitions, signed by members of the Association, requesting that DeVoll and the other sitting board members take certain actions. (3) The cover sheet on each petition displayed a Wingert Water Systems letterhead and included a handwritten note, stating, "Mr[.] Norris DeVoll does not own property in Scenic Heights Subdivision. He is not and cannot be a member of the Scenic Height[s] Subdivision Property Owner Association." At trial, DeVoll asserted that the Wingert Water Systems fax machine was used to send the petitions and that employees of Wingert Water Systems canvassed the subdivision to obtain signatures for the petitions. Neither claim was disputed by the Wingerts. DeVoll also introduced into evidence a video clip of Darold Wingert announcing at an Association meeting that DeVoll was not a property owner. Finally, DeVoll elicited testimony from one Scenic Heights resident who stated that she had voted to remove DeVoll from office because she had heard that he wanted to "foreclose" and "steal" property from residents who did not pay their Association dues. This resident further testified, however, that she had not heard these rumors from the Wingerts.

DeVoll testified that as a result of the rumors circulating about him, he was "afraid [that he had] been stricken from a number of Christmas lists" and that he has "no neighbors that will have anything to do with [him] basically in that subdivision." DeVoll further testified that he was "subjected to nails in the driveway, feces in the mailbox, landscaping scrubs mysteriously dying, eggs splattered on the deck and the house, multiple litigations, reported to the Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee twice, criminal charges, [and] four simultaneous flats on a boat trailer." DeVoll declined, however, to attribute any of these acts to the Wingerts, stating:

[T]he criminal charges that were alleged, I never figured out where it came from or how it happened, but it--but it falls right in line with the nails in the driveway and the feces in the mailbox and stuff like that. I have some ideas, but I told my criminal attorney that I wouldn't even care to voice them as much pain as actually resulted from that. I wouldn't want it--to put anybody else through that with no more information than--than I have at this point other than suspicion, but it caused a tremendous amount of pain and suffering and--and discord in my family and my children and costs, just--just tremendous amount of costs.



DeVoll also testified that he suffered a heart attack during a summary-judgment hearing in the pending litigation. Other than his own assertion that he had a heart attack "over all this mess," DeVoll presented no evidence regarding the cause of his heart attack. DeVoll claimed that he had $30,000 in medical bills related to the heart attack, but did not introduce any evidence of his medical expenses.

DeVoll also argued at trial that Darold Wingert had interfered with his official duties as a member of the Association board of directors by unilaterally filing a corrected renewal of deed restrictions with the Comal County clerk in November 2006. This action, taken while Wingert was acting as president of the Association after the invalid October 2006 election, was later deemed "null and void and of no legal effect" by the trial court in Wingert I. 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 5334, at *7. That ruling was not challenged on appeal. See generally id.

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Darold E. Wingert Wingert Water Systems, Inc. and Alvena Wingert v. Norris J. Devoll, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darold-e-wingert-wingert-water-systems-inc-and-alv-texapp-2010.